Beeminder Turns Two!

You almost surely don’t! (If you do, let us know, because we have presents for you — for real.)
How about a year ago when we wrote a blog post much like this one for our first anniversary of launching?

Most of you don’t remember that either.
Last year at this time, 6,000 people had signed up for Beeminder.
We’re now at 15,000.
By more important metrics, we’ve actually doubled a couple times since then.
People have started 36,000 goals with Beeminder (we were at 10,000 a year ago).
The total number of datapoints plotted is now over 2 million (it was 400,000 last year).
And the total of all pledges ever made has gone from $50,000 to $165,000 (or maybe $328,000 — this is a confusing number to calculate, what with moving up and down the pledge schedule, and for now we need to just get this blog post out the door!).

“We’re talking upper middle class money”

We hope it’s not too gauche, or in Beeminder’s case,
perverse,
to talk about actual revenue but it’s an important metric for Beeminder’s future:
our revenue has steadily and predictably grown from $3,000 last October to a projected $14,000 this month.
So with our 3.25 FTEs, we’re talking upper middle class money here!
What that means for you, Dear Reader, is that Beeminder is not going anywhere.
We’re in this for the long haul.

So, in that spirit, let us retrospect!
Here are some of our favorite bits from the last year.

Press (aka “OMG did you hear about how great Beeminder is?”)

The most high profile press coverage of the past year was our appearance on the front page of the Wall Street Journal.
We also had a month-long sojourn in the skies in Southwest Airlines’ Spirit magazine which was technically even higher profile (get it?) and certainly yielded more new users.
More recently, we appeared in Shape magazine and the Portland Business Journal, and we have 37 sightings of ourselves in the news and blogosphere since our last press roundup six months ago which we’ll blog about later.
We’re a major plot point in Nick Winter’s book The Motivation Hacker and we were a minor sponsor of the global Quantified Self conference, which we’ll blog about separately soon.

Another year with Beeminder of course also means another year of improvements that you yourself can verify with your very own eyes, per our
UVI yellow brick road.
Can you guess how many User-Visible Improvements we’ve made in the last year? Yes, 365.
There are a few big headliners though.
Retroratchet lets you get rid of excess safety buffer.
Scheduled breaks let you more easily plan ahead for changes in your road, e.g., vacation.
The new world order, with precommit-to-recommit for all makes for more sensible defaults — you have to intentionally quit your self-improving.
In the same vein, Do Less goals are much more useful.
Namely, if you ignore them, you derail!
We implemented zeno polling
to keep bugging you more and more insistently as you approach the cliff edge of your road — incredibly valuable for certain types of goals (but only on by default for
GmailZero goals currently).

On the subject of money, we implemented pledge short-circuiting so you can move up (and down) the pledge schedule, and we gave you premium Beeminder
(y’know, in case you want to pay us more money).
We also nerded out a whole bunch on the fairness of premium subscriptions.

The ugly, the bad, and the technical

Though we’re based in the Rose City, it wasn’t all roses and ponies this past year.
In particular we lack ponies.
We don’t have a whole lot to say here, because we’re doing a pretty good job overall.
But we did refund a fair chunk of money to people in January
of this year when we discovered that sometimes non-legit charges were in fact getting charged, despite our attempts to cancel them!
There was a second time we initiated refunds this year, after we suddenly changed reminder settings for GmailZero goals.
We realized what a disaster that was for people who’d been relying on those urgent reminders, and it was the catalyst for implementing Zeno Polling.

We also had some scheduled down time once or twice, like when we moved to a new server, and upgraded Rails.
In fact, we’ve been experiencing some growing pains with our architecture in the past months: our overnight refreshes are getting slower and there’ve been far too many times when — particularly if you’re an early riser — you may have woken up to stale graphs.
This may be our excuse to switch to client-side graphing sooner rather than later.

Hello data!

Man did we rock on the integrations, i.e., automatic data sources, this year.
We added
Duolingo,
Github,
RescueTime,
FitBit, and
Trello,
as well as releasing our Android and iOS apps (which were on the verge of being announced this time last year).
Reducing the friction required to beemind All The Things is top of mind after spending two days with a group of the most motivated data nerds out there at the Quantified Self global conference this weekend.
Even amongst the sort of people who track anything from meditation, to heart rate variability, to calorie intake, to bowel movements, to cognitive performance, and beyond, the problem of burnout is a hard one to tackle.
You’ve probably got the best chance for beemindery success if the data is passively collected, without remembering to enter it and such.

Wow. This post’s been a delicious mouthful. So much goodness has happened in the last year!
Give me a moment to wax earnestly about how grateful I am for all of you…
I get all mushy faced and proud mama hen when I click through legit checks to fix your goals, my beeminders, and I see the march of progress in your graphs — months or years of dots cleaving to the road.
I’m like that too.
And I’m so excited for another year of relentless awesomeness together!

Start Here

Does Beeminder sound super crazypants? Just confusing? One of the first things you may want to check out is our User's Guide for New Bees. Check out other posts we're most proud of by clicking the "best-of" tag below. If you're a glutton for honey, the "bee-all" tag has everything we still think is worth reading. Other good ones are the "rationality" and "science" tags, if you're into that.

Akrasia

Akrasia (ancient Greek ἀκρασία, "lacking command over oneself"; adjective: "akratic") is the state of acting against one's better judgment, not doing what one genuinely wants to do. It encompasses procrastination, lack of self-control, lack of follow-through, and any kind of addictive behavior.
wikipedia.org/wiki/Akrasia